The Institute of Development Studies and Partner Organisations
Browse

Complex Communities and Relational Webs

Download (238.6 kB)
journal contribution
posted on 2024-09-06, 05:12 authored by Dianne Rocheleau
Summaries Poststructural applications of actor?network theory and complexity theory promise a means to encompass uncertainty, diversity and surprise in changing communities and complex human ecologies. Local organisations and social movements mediate relations within and between households, groups and communities based on gender, class, age, occupation and political affiliation. Community groups tend toward multiple membership, complex identities and flexible webs of affinity between disparate groups. Coalitions gel, melt, collide and coalesce according to need and do not follow narrowly circumscribed economic or ideological lines. An example from Machakos Distinct, Kenya draws upon a landscape and a community dramatically shaped in the last hundred years by global empires, international economies and militaries, foreign and civil wars, local innovation and resistance, and changing gender and class relations. The case study focuses on the changing nature of community groups, their representation of multiple local constituencies and the shifting and pivotal roles of various groups in interactions between people, their lands and external forces (state, market and civil society).

History

Publisher

Institute of Development Studies

Citation

Rocheleau, D. (2001) Complex Communities and Relational Webs . IDS Bulletin 32(4): 78-87

Series

IDS Bulletin Vol. 32 Nos. 4

IDS Item Types

Article

Copyright holder

© 2001 Institue of Development Studies

Usage metrics

    Volume 32. Issue 4: Environmental Governance in an Uncertain World

    Categories

    No categories selected

    Licence

    Exports

    RefWorks
    BibTeX
    Ref. manager
    Endnote
    DataCite
    NLM
    DC